"The Laundry List" (1 Corinthians 16:1-24)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. Do you make budget to regularly give offerings and tithes for the gospel work of the Church?  How do you “steward” the Lord’s resources?  Discuss your experiences of growth and challenges on the subject of “money.”

  2. Do you get along well with others in the church community?  Do you submit well to the appointed leaders and give them due recognition, not because you expect perfection, but even through human-flaws?

  3. How are you at expressing godly affection for your brothers and sisters?  Do you even try?  Share your experiences in making these efforts, how they have worked in the past or have not.

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

The Laundry List
Jim Jung

"A Glorious Hope" (1 Corinthians 15:35-58)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. How large does the hope of the resurrection loom in your daily life?  

  2. How would you summarise the hope that we have in resurrection?

  3. What difference does the hope of the resurrection make in our labour in the Lord?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

A Glorious Hope
Sijin Yang

"Ordering Worship" (1 Corinthians 14:26-40)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. What do you value more?  --order or freedom?  

  2. How does your longing testify of the goodness of God?

  3. According to the sermon, how can you convert your longings and frustrations into hope and faith in the Redeemer?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

Ordering Worship
Jim Jung

"The Perfect Love" (1 Corinthians 13:1-13)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. What is your greatest longing for perfection? What do you want “fixed”, or to have?

  2. How does your longing testify of the goodness of God?

  3. According to the sermon, how can you convert your longings and frustrations into hope and faith in the Redeemer?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

The Perfect Love
Jim Jung

"One and Many" (1 Corinthians 12:12-31)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. Why is the diversity of gifts, roles, strengths and weaknesses within the Church something to thank God for?

  2. Why did God deliberately compose the body of many parts, each with varying roles?

  3. How does the headship of Christ help to focus the activities of the members of the body?

Order of Worship can be found here.

One and Many
Sijin Yang

"Tongues & Prophecy" (1 Corinthians 12:1-11; 14:1-25)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. What is the purpose of spiritual gifts?  What spiritual gifts do you possess?

  2. What does it mean to “prophesy” today, and how can you exercise it?

  3. Have you ever seen someone exercise the “speaking of tongue”?  How does today’s sermon reconcile with your experience?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

Tongues & Prophecy
Jim Jung

"Truly Equal" (1 Corinthians 11:1-16)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. What can we gain from understanding varying “Degrees of Importance” for any issue, and acquiring sound biblical interpretive methodology (biblical hermeneutics)?

  2. How did God use the inequality of authority to redeem mankind in Jesus?

  3. What does it mean to love/lead like Jesus?  And what does it mean to submit/love like Jesus?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

Truly Equal
Jim Jung

"Pursuit of Glory" (John 16:25 - 17:5)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. What things did Jesus overcome in this world to make us take comfort in Him?

  2. How did Jesus exercise His given authority over people?

  3. Since Jesus is returning to glory which He had “before the world existed”, what can we say about His humility on earth?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

Pursuit of Glory
Jim Jung

"Comfort for God's People" (Isaiah 42:1-9)

DISCUSSIONS QUESTIONS

  1. How does the gentleness of Jesus comfort your current weaknesses and fears?

  2. How should the power of Jesus shape your perspective on how we ought to think about and conduct ourselves in our current situation?

  3. How does the glory of Jesus motivate you to spend and steward the very limited time we have in this life?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

Comfort for God's People
Sijin Yang

“Raised from the Dead” (1 Corinthians 15:12-19)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

1. Is Christianity realistic about what is at stake regarding the resurrection of Jesus Christ?

2. What gives you assurance of Christ’s, and therefore your own resurrection?  What support do you have from the sermon, or past lessons?

3. What does the Bible say about our resurrected and glorified body?

4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Order of Worship can be found here.

Raised from the Dead
Jim Jung

"Save Us, We Pray" (Mark 11:1-11)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. What sort of “saving” do we really need now? How can we recognize our Savior?

  2. What is required in praying to our Saviour?

  3. In what ways are we similar to the colt on which Jesus rode into Jerusalem?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Save Us, We Pray
Jim Jung

“Just As You Are” (1 Thessalonians 5:1-11)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

1. Do you truly feel secure in Jesus? Does your eternal spiritual security translate to earthly and physical security? How do you understand the presence of “comfort gap” between what we know to be true spiritually and how we experience life physically now?

2. What can you practically do better to “keep awake and be sober” according to the sermon?

3. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Just As You Are
Jim Jung

"Zeal for God's House (John 2:13-22)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. Where does God dwell individually ( ), and corporately ( )?

  2. Where do we see the continuity and discontinuity between earthly church and Heavenly Kingdom?

  3. Unlike ancient temples and medieval cathedrals, how can a modern space accommodate Kingdom-ministry of local churches?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Zeal for God's House
Jim Jung

"Vision for God's Glory" (1 Corinthians 10:23-33)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. According to the message, what does it mean to seek the good of our neighbours in Sydney?

  2. How does our participation in the Great Commission glorify God?

  3. What about the HCC Vision 20/30 excites you? Where or how do you see yourself being a part?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Vision for God's Glory
Jim Jung

"God's Faithfulness to His Covenant People" (1 Corinthians 10:1-22)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:

  1. How does God’s judgement in the Old Testament help you to reflect honestly upon your own life of faith?

  2. How does God’s faithfulness in testing encourage and comfort you to overcome trials in life?

  3. Why is it important that we heed God’s warning in remaining faithful to him?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

God's Faithfulness to His Covenant People
Sijin Yang

“All Things to All People” (1 Corinthians 9:1-27)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:

  1. How did Paul model “being all things to all people”? And how can we adapt our approach towards others so that they may be won over to Christ?

  2. How can the church both provide wages for the labouring gospel-ministers, while making the ministry of the gospel free of charge?

  3. What can we learn about “Christian discipline” from Paul’s examples of runner, athlete and boxer?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

All Things to All People
Jim Jung

"Loving Knowledge" (1 Corinthians 8:1-13)

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:

  1. What particular verse in 1 Cor. 8:1-13 outlines the “potent knowledge” we have as Christians? How can this great knowledge “puff up,” rather than “build up?” What is that attitude we must have regarding this knowledge?

  2. What functions like “food offered to idols” in today’s culture? What do we offer and taint in modern idolatry?

  3. Who are the brothers/sisters with “weak conscience”? In contrast, who are not? How can we look after those weaker brothers and sisters?

  4. What was the most helpful/challenging/encouraging part of the sermon for you?

Loving Knowledge
Jim Jung